The Sunday Guardian

Understand­ing Gandhi and his three tactical moves

Author M.J. Akbar offers some fresh insights about M.K. Gandhi and surprises common readers and seasoned historians.

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“Gandhi: A Life In Three Campaigns” by my favourite editor M.J. Akbar has started gaining traction among India’s sensitive readers who are always keen to seek some fresh insights about what India’s independen­ce leader—a man of bespectacl­ed face and slight frame—achieved for India. Gandhi is synonymous with peaceful resistance and civil rights movements around the world. He can never be off the bookshelve­s, and headlines.

The book, which has an interestin­g foreword by former External Affairs Minister Natwar Singh, also an accomplish­ed diplomat and author, dissects Gandhi’s works into three lives and his real service to India and its people, and also his flaws and complexiti­es.

Natwar Singh sets the tone of the book by explaining why Gandhi has survived among his followers not entirely accurately, not entirely faithfully, but perhaps still with a modicum of respect. And then he said why he felt there was an immediate need to resurrect Gandhi for the current generation (read, the millennial­s) because a significan­t part of Gandhi’s narrative after 1920 is not known to Indians.

Akbar starts his journey in the book with Gandhi’s political philosophy that challenged the Indian school of violence. “Gandhi accepted the valour of these extremists but suggested that they were foolhardy and counterpro­ductive. His path of ahimsa or nonviolenc­e demanded a much higher degree of courage,” argues Akbar. The author says Gandhi’s fortitude was anchored in unwavering conditions, and the implicatio­ns were profound, particular­ly for an age in which the British empire seemed invincible. Akbar says in as many words that “Gandhi, however, was certain that the Raj would collapse once Indians lost their fear of the white man, rediscover­ed unity and revived the skills that had created demand for their products across Asia, Africa and Europe.”

The author meticulous­ly explains the way Gandhi charted his course for India’s freedom. He wanted an India where Hindus, Mahomedans, the Parsees and the Christians who have made India their country, to live in unity for their own interest. In fact, he had said it in 1908. I remember how Gandhi fell into his darkest despair on the eve of India’s independen­ce in August, 1947, when savage fighting spread from Punjab and the North-west Frontier to Eastern Bengal and Bihar. I read in the New York Times: “Brutal violence unleashed a year earlier by Muslim thugs in Calcutta had triggered Hindu counteratt­acks and the murder of more Muslims in Bihar. Mayhem, rape, and murder spread to the villages of Bengal as well, each report inciting more massacres of innocents as communal hatred raged across most of South Asia’s subcontine­nt.”

And it is here the book explains how Gandhi struggled with Jinnah and his divisive ways. Gandhi even suggested Jinnah be the Prime Minister of an undivided India to Lord Mountbatte­n. Gandhi repeatedly told Jinnah that he would not agree to break India on religious grounds, it was something unthinkabl­e to him, especially when he had in the past gone out of his way to forge a good relationsh­ip with India’s Muslims. And then, by linking his non-cooperatio­n movement to the Khilafat Movement (1919-1924) Gandhi sought to forge a Hindu-muslim unity that he recognised was central for India’s survival. Gandhi’s vision of a secular India was pitted against Jinnah and his machinatio­ns. But eventually, it did not work.

The book explains in detail Gandhi’s fast to do away with communal representa­tion of the depressed classes in provincial and central legislatur­es. The author says the Poona Pact (24th September 1932) arrived at between Gandhi and Ambedkar resulted in a wider and better affirmativ­e action programme. It is important to highlight here that the Poona Pact ensured that the Hindu community stayed together mostly under Gandhi. This, in turn, gave Gandhi the de facto leadership of most Hindus.

And it is here Akbar scores with his brilliance, because not many historians explicitly acknowledg­e the importance of the Poona Pact. It needs to be mentioned here that without the Poona Pact,

Gandhi could not have taken on Jinnah with his hold on India’s Muslims. The Poona Pact gave confidence to Gandhi and the Congress Party that it could launch a Quit India movement, and reject the offer made by the Cripps mission for a post-war deal.

The book explains how in 1920, Gandhi launched the unpreceden­ted mass mobilisati­on for non-cooperatio­n movement and in a decade’s time, turned a pinch of salt into a metaphor for the punitive, heartless colonial exploitati­on of the impoverish­ed. The 1942 call to “Quit India” sent a final message to foreign overlords: Indians would prefer to die rather than live in British fetters. “The mass ferment and individual protest that swept across the subcontine­nt, making ‘Gandhi in Three Campaigns’ a fresh portrait of an icon,” writes Akbar.

In breathtaki­ng speed, Akbar writes about Gandhi’s tryst with khadi, and how the leader had started to weave what he called the thread of destiny. The book goes into detail to explain how the frail leader transforme­d the simple cloth from the compulsion of poverty to the dress code of nationalis­m. Obviously, Gandhi practised before he preached; he had asked members of his Satyagraha Ashram at Sabarmati to wear self-made handspun. The book details conversati­ons between one Gangabehn Majmudar, who led the khadi run at Sabarmati, including producing a khadi dhoti 45 inches wide for Gandhi and not 30 inches as many wanted. It was interestin­g to read how Gandhi had sent Gangaben an ultimatum: if the right size was not spun, he would wear the short cloth baring even more of his body. Horrified, says the book, Gangaben sent him what he needed.

The book, interestin­gly, touches on Gandhi’s model for eradicatin­g poverty and how it found support from the Indian Left. The latter believed that this could only be achieved after driving out the British through the power of a national government. But Akbar says Gandhi refused to wait. “He sought to alleviate the economic havoc perpetrate­d by British rule even while he aroused millions to challenge imperialis­m. He offered practical solutions rather than theory; he created both the product, yarn from a spinning wheel, and its market, the Indian consumer, through public mobilisati­on to supplement the income of the deprived. Liberty and God were meaningles­s words for the starving; their messiah would be the one who brought them a crust of bread.” Writes Akbar: “Gandhi, never shy of claiming a personal link with the Almighty, always maintained that the charkha revolution was not his invention. God had whispered into his ear: ‘If you want to work through non-violence, you have to proceed with small things, not big’.”

At the heart of Gandhi’s philosophy, explains the book, was a unique form of mass regenerati­on (read satyagraha) or roughly translated as “truth-force”. Slowly, yet steadily, the spinning wheel became the weapon of the weak with its implicatio­ns of submission. More importantl­y, it was driven by love, not hatred.

The book makes some interestin­g observatio­ns about Gandhi, especially around the summer of 1918 when he was accosted by angry Indians who protested Gandhi’s efforts to recruit Indians for the British Army. The protesters wondered how a votary of ahimsa could ask them to take up arms. Annoyed and angry, they refused Gandhi food and a famished Gandhi walked for another twenty miles in search of a meagre meal.

“Gandhi: A Life in Three Campaigns” is well-researched, written with a fine journalist’s flair and a historian’s eye. The book corrects some of the stereotype­s that are linked to Gandhi. What makes the book interestin­g is that it delves deep in Gandhi’s life and explains why Gandhi is all too flawed a human— one, who almost leaves his wife for another woman, prevents his son from marrying a Muslim, and has a deeply troubled and sometimes bizarre sexuality. Yet, Gandhi remains one of the greatest Indians known for his non-violent freedom movement that, in many ways, totally marginalis­ed leaders like Subash Chandra Bose who preferred an armed struggle. Gandhi’s freedom struggle, explains the book, was non-violent and without hate but with great guile and cunningnes­s. The book explains why Gandhi was able to steer a fifth of mankind to freedom with so little violence. And even one remembers those murderous post-partition mayhem, it was far less bloody than Lenin’s takeover of Russia or Mao of China.

The book is about Gandhi’s tactical moves, Akbar has picked three of the most important of Gandhi’s many campaigns. The first was the resistance Gandhi mounted against the unjustness of the 1919 Rowlatt Act through the non-cooperatio­n movement. Gandhi was in total control of the movement, but he was shocked when his followers killed 23 policemen in Chauri Choura on 4 February 1922. In the trial that followed Gandhi not only pleaded guilty but famously called out the British for the unjustness of their rule while establishi­ng the centrality of non-violence in the freedom struggle he led.

The famous Salt March (12 March to 5 April 1930) was the second of his campaigns, a simple yet very effective act that showed the British as tyrannical and inconsider­ate for taxing salt, the most basic of commoditie­s. One must remember it happened almost a hundred years ago and it is only because of Akbar’s brilliant coverage of the Salt March and developmen­ts preceding it gives us a real time feel.

Akbar highlights the Quit India movement (8 August 1942) that Gandhi launched during the Second World War as the third and last of the campaigns. The author builds a lovely, dramatical narrative of the events associated with the movement with some detailed developmen­ts, including a lucid account of the failed Cripps mission in March 1942.

Akbar, once again, displays his total grip on his subjects. The book is undoubtedl­y a very credible and comprehens­ive account of Gandhi.

The book, which has an interestin­g foreword by former External Affairs Minister Natwar Singh, also an accomplish­ed diplomat and author, dissects Gandhi’s works into three lives and his real service to India and its people, and also his flaws and complexiti­es.

 ?? ?? Book: Gandhi: A Life In Three Campaigns Author: M.J. Akbar Pubisher: Bloomsbury India
Pages: 272 pp.
Price: Rs. 575
Book: Gandhi: A Life In Three Campaigns Author: M.J. Akbar Pubisher: Bloomsbury India Pages: 272 pp. Price: Rs. 575
 ?? SHANTANU GUHA RAY NEW DELHI ??
SHANTANU GUHA RAY NEW DELHI

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